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Suppose a mutual fund knew for sure which 10% of the largest U.S. companies would earn the highest returns over the next five years, over each upcoming five-year period. You’d invest in that fund and hang tight, right?

A research company called Alpha Architect, recently posed this as an interesting thought experiment. It divided all of the 500 largest U.S. stocks into deciles, and imagined that a hypothetical fund was investing in only the upper 10% returning stocks in the first five-year period, starting on January 1, 1927, and every five years it would switch the portfolio to the future top 10% of all stocks. (Hindsight makes it a lot easier to model what would happen if we were blessed with perfect foresight.)

Okay, so now you’re invested, and if you could have bought and held this magical fund, then at the end of the year 2009, you’d have earned just under 29% a year. What could be easier?

But, not knowing that this fund had a workable crystal ball, would you have held on while it was experiencing a 75.96% downturn during a particularly bad bear market starting in 1929? Or might you have been tempted to bail to safer bonds at some point during that catastrophe? This perfect fund fell more than 44% during a one-year period starting at the end of March, 1937, and overall it experienced drops of 20% or more nine times during your holding period—plus an additional 19% draw down that took it within a whisker of bear market territory.

Some of the times when you might have been sorely tempted to jump ship: the 2000-2001 downturn, when your marvelous fund lost 34% while the S&P 500 was only down 21%. Or a precipitous 22.11% downturn starting at the end of 1974, when the S&P 500 was gaining 19.94%. Or the 19.91% drop from the end of September through the end of November 2002, at a time when the S&P 500 was sailing along with a 15.28% positive return. The long-term returns were terrific, but it took a lot of stomach to hold on for the full ride.

The authors also looked at an even more marvelous manager, who not only bought only the 10% of stocks that would go up the most in the subsequent five years, but also shorted the 10% of stocks that would experience the worst 5-year performance (shorting means that you borrow and sell a stock first, hoping it goes down, then buy it back when it’s cheaper). The mechanics of this fund are a little more complicated, but the results were even more dramatic: the fund experienced enormous losses at times when the S&P 500 was experiencing gains—as you can see from the accompanying chart, which shows this perfect fund’s biggest losses compared with S&P 500 returns during the same period. You really had to be intrepid to hold on and claim the fund’s remarkable 39.74% annualized returns.

The point? The authors say that even if God (who presumably has perfect foresight) were running a mutual fund, He would have lost a lot of investors who lost faith in his management skill during those times when the markets experienced rough patches. It’s fundamentally a lesson in humility and patience; great long-term track records are not immune from pullbacks, and our all-too-human tendency is to lose faith in the face of adversity.

What does this tell us? It indicates that investing is hard, because our psychological make-up tends to push us to do the wrong thing at the wrong time when it comes to our money. At the risk of sounding self-serving, having an advisor manage your assets can help put a barrier between your natural instincts and the markets. And who can’t use a little coaching and seasoned expertise …?

If you would like to review your current investment portfolio or discuss any other financial planning matters, please don’t hesitate to contact us or visit our website at http://www.ydfs.com. We are a fee-only fiduciary financial planning firm that always puts your interests first. If you are not a client yet, an initial consultation is complimentary and there is never any pressure or hidden sales pitch.

Like this:

On Tuesday of this week, the U.S. stock markets (S&P 500 index) went up 2.39%, the highest one-day return in a month. Analysts attributed the rise to a variety of economic news that suggested that the American economy is not, after all, plunging into recession. The buoyant mood among investors may not last, but for many, it’s a welcome sign that things may not be as gloomy as they seemed just a month ago.

In fact, the S&P 500 only dropped about 12%, from 2078.36 at the end of December 2015 to the bottom of 1829.08 on February 11—despite widespread predictions of a 20% bear market. Since then, it has risen on shaky legs back to more than 1999, just 79 points from breaking even on the year. One more day like Tuesday would erase nearly all of the damage in 2016.

The good economic news involved construction spending, which reached its highest level since 2007. Oil prices were also gaining ground, although it’s hard to see why the average American would find reason to cheer about that. In addition, new orders and inventories stabilized in the manufacturing sector, after experiencing downturns in the last quarter of 2015. On Friday, The February jobs report showed that the economy created 242,000 jobs and unemployment remains at a low 4.9%. Other factors include the possibility that U.S. stock investors may finally have decided that declines in the Chinese markets are not going to directly affect the value of American-based businesses.

None of this means that we know what will happen next. Neither we nor any of the pundits you see on the financial news have any idea whether that long-awaited 20% decline will materialize, or the markets will continue to recover and we’ll all look back on February 11 prices as a great time to buy. But it’s worth reflecting on how unexpected this latest rally has been at a time when it seemed that all the news pointed to more pain and decline. Anybody who believed the pundits and fully retreated to the sidelines after the January selloff is now sitting on losses and wondering whether to jump in now and hope the gains continue, or wait and hope for another downturn, and risk losing even more ground if this turns out to be a long-term rally. This is not to say that hedging or taking some bull market profits off the table is still not a good idea. All-or-nothing investing is almost never a good idea.

We can never see the next turn in the market roller coaster, but long-term, the markets seem to operate under the opposite of the pull of gravity. You and I know with some degree of certainty in which direction the next 100% market move will be, even if we can’t pinpoint when or where.

If you would like to review your current investment portfolio or discuss any other financial planning matters, please don’t hesitate to contact us or visit our website at http://www.ydfs.com. We are a fee-only fiduciary financial planning firm that always puts your interests first. If you are not a client yet, an initial consultation is complimentary and there is never any pressure or hidden sales pitch.